Section of Endocrinology
300 Cedar St., TAC S141
New Haven, CT 06520-8020
Tel: 203.737.5071
Fax: 203.737.5558
kathleen.catalano@yale.edu
The Yale Diabetes Endocrinology Research Center (DERC) was established in the spring of 1993 with the goal of promoting research in diabetes and related metabolic and endocrine disorders at the university. The DERC brings together a multidisciplinary group of nearly 100 independent member scientists as well as professional supporting staff, new investigators and research trainees from the Departments of Internal Medicine, Pediatrics, Immunobiology, Biology, Cell Biology, Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Genetics, Molecular and Cellular Physiology, Pharmacology, Surgery, Orthopedics, Neurosurgery, Neurology, Psychiatry, Dermatology, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Diagnostic Radiology and from the Schools of Public Health and Nursing. The scope of the research activities of the membership is very broad, ranging from basic molecular biology to whole body clinical physiology in patients with diabetes. The members, however, share a common interest in research that is related to diabetes and metabolism or is fundamental to understanding its pathogenesis or for the development of new treatment strategies. The design of the Yale DERC is aimed at developing an infrastructure that could serve as a catalyst to stimulate innovative research. The cornerstone of the Yale DERC is its seven Research Cores that provide funded basic and clinical investigators with the opportunity to more efficiently utilize resources and expand the scope of their research programs. The Clinical Metabolism Core facilitates metabolic research in patients, whereas the Molecular, Microarray, Transgenic, Physiology and Cell Biology Cores that comprise the Animal Resource Program offer investigators the tools to create and test novel animal models starting from the molecule and ending with biological outcomes. The newly formed Clinical Translation Core provides an infrastructure to facilitate patient-based diabetes research. The Administrative Core oversees the operation of the DERC, its Pilot/Feasibility Project and Enrichment Programs, and helps to coordinate patient-based research in diabetes.
The Center brings together a multi- disciplinary group of nearly 100 Yale scientists as well as professional supporting staff and research trainees from twenty Departments at the School of Medicine and from the Schools of Public Health and Nursing as well as the Biological Sciences more…
The Yale Diabetes Endocrinology Research Center is pleased to announce the availability of pilot and feasibility project grants. more…
New Space for the DERC and its Members
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